This is the story of a man who did
not appreciate his wife; also, of a woman who did
him too great an honor when she gave herself to him.
Incidentally, it concerns a Jesuit priest who had never
been known to lie. He was an appurtenance, and
a very necessary one, to the Yukon country; but the
presence of the other two was merely accidental.
They were specimens of the many strange waifs which
ride the breast of a gold rush or come tailing along
behind.
Edwin Bentham and Grace Bentham were
waifs; they were also tailing along behind, for the
Klondike rush of ’97 had long since swept down
the great river and subsided into the famine-stricken
city of Dawson. When the Yukon shut up shop and
went to sleep under a three-foot ice-sheet, this peripatetic
couple found themselves at the Five Finger Rapids,
with the City of Gold still a journey of many sleeps
to the north.
Many cattle had been butchered at
this place in the fall of the year, and the offal
made a goodly heap. The three fellow-voyagers
of Edwin Bentham and wife gazed upon this deposit,
did a little mental arithmetic, caught a certain glimpse
of a bonanza, and decided to remain. And all
winter they sold sacks of bones and frozen hides to
the famished dog-teams. It was a modest price
they asked, a dollar a pound, just as it came.
Six months later, when the sun came back and the Yukon
awoke, they buckled on their heavy moneybelts and journeyed
back to the Southland, where they yet live and lie
mightily about the Klondike they never saw.
But Edwin Bentham he was
an indolent fellow, and had he not been possessed
of a wife, would have gladly joined issued in the dog-meat
speculation. As it was, she played upon his vanity,
told him how great and strong he was, how a man such
as he certainly was could overcome all obstacles and
of a surety obtain the Golden Fleece. So he squared
his jaw, sold his share in the bones and hides for
a sled and one dog, and turned his snowshoes to the
north. Needless to state, Grace Bentham’s
snowshoes never allowed his tracks to grow cold.
Nay, ere their tribulations had seen three days, it
was the man who followed in the rear, and the woman
who broke trail in advance. Of course, if anybody
hove in sight, the position was instantly reversed.
Thus did his manhood remain virgin to the travelers
who passed like ghosts on the silent trail. There
are such men in this world.
How such a man and such a woman came
to take each other for better and for worse is unimportant
to this narrative. These things are familiar
to us all, and those people who do them, or even question
them too closely, are apt to lose a beautiful faith
which is known as Eternal Fitness.
Edwin Bentham was a boy, thrust by
mischance into a man’s body, a boy
who could complacently pluck a butterfly, wing from
wing, or cower in abject terror before a lean, nervy
fellow, not half his size. He was a selfish cry-baby,
hidden behind a man’s mustache and stature, and
glossed over with a skin-deep veneer of culture and
conventionality. Yes; he was a clubman and a
society man, the sort that grace social functions
and utter inanitiés with a charm and unction which
is indescribable; the sort that talk big, and cry
over a toothache; the sort that put more hell into
a woman’s life by marrying her than can the
most graceless libertine that ever browsed in forbidden
pastures. We meet these men every day, but we
rarely know them for what they are. Second to
marrying them, the best way to get this knowledge is
to eat out of the same pot and crawl under the same
blanket with them for well, say a week;
no greater margin is necessary.
To see Grace Bentham, was to see a
slender, girlish creature; to know her, was to know
a soul which dwarfed your own, yet retained all the
elements of the eternal feminine. This was the
woman who urged and encouraged her husband in his
Northland quest, who broke trail for him when no one
was looking, and cried in secret over her weakling
woman’s body.
So journeyed this strangely assorted
couple down to old Fort Selkirk, then through fivescore
miles of dismal wilderness to Stuart River. And
when the short day left them, and the man lay down
in the snow and blubbered, it was the woman who lashed
him to the sled, bit her lips with the pain of her
aching limbs, and helped the dog haul him to Malemute
Kid’s cabin. Malemute Kid was not at home,
but Meyers, the German trader, cooked great moose-steaks
and shook up a bed of fresh pine boughs. Lake,
Langham, and Parker, were excited, and not unduly so
when the cause was taken into account.
’Oh, Sandy! Say, can you
tell a porterhouse from a round? Come out and
lend us a hand, anyway!’ This appeal emanated
from the cache, where Langham was vainly struggling
with divers quarters of frozen moose.
‘Don’t you budge from those dishes!’
commanded Parker.
’I say, Sandy; there’s
a good fellow just run down to the Missouri
Camp and borrow some cinnamon,’ begged Lake.
‘Oh! oh! hurry up! Why
don’t ’ But the crash of meat
and boxes, in the cache, abruptly quenched this peremptory
summons.
‘Come now, Sandy; it won’t
take a minute to go down to the Missouri ’
‘You leave him alone,’
interrupted Parker. ’How am I to mix the
biscuits if the table isn’t cleared off?’
Sandy paused in indecision, till suddenly
the fact that he was Langham’s ‘man’
dawned upon him. Then he apologetically threw
down the greasy dishcloth, and went to his master’s
rescue.
These promising scions of wealthy
progenitors had come to the Northland in search of
laurels, with much money to burn, and a ‘man’
apiece. Luckily for their souls, the other two
men were up the White River in search of a mythical
quartz-ledge; so Sandy had to grin under the responsibility
of three healthy masters, each of whom was possessed
of peculiar cookery ideas. Twice that morning
had a disruption of the whole camp been imminent,
only averted by immense concessions from one or the
other of these knights of the chafing-dish. But
at last their mutual creation, a really dainty dinner,
was completed.
Then they sat down to a three-cornered
game of ’cut-throat,’ a proceeding
which did away with all casus belli for future
hostilities, and permitted the victor to depart on
a most important mission.
This fortune fell to Parker, who parted
his hair in the middle, put on his mittens and bearskin
cap, and stepped over to Malemute Kid’s cabin.
And when he returned, it was in the company of Grace
Bentham and Malemute Kid, the former very
sorry her husband could not share with her their hospitality,
for he had gone up to look at the Henderson Creek
mines, and the latter still a trifle stiff from breaking
trail down the Stuart River.
Meyers had been asked, but had declined,
being deeply engrossed in an experiment of raising
bread from hops.
Well, they could do without the husband;
but a woman why they had not seen one all
winter, and the presence of this one promised a new
era in their lives.
They were college men and gentlemen,
these three young fellows, yearning for the flesh-pots
they had been so long denied. Probably Grace
Bentham suffered from a similar hunger; at least, it
meant much to her, the first bright hour in many weeks
of darkness.
But that wonderful first course, which
claimed the versatile Lake for its parent, had no
sooner been served than there came a loud knock at
the door.
‘Oh! Ah! Won’t
you come in, Mr. Bentham?’ said Parker, who had
stepped to see who the newcomer might be.
‘Is my wife here?’ gruffly responded that
worthy.
‘Why, yes. We left word
with Mr. Meyers.’ Parker was exerting his
most dulcet tones, inwardly wondering what the deuce
it all meant. ’Won’t you come in?
Expecting you at any moment, we reserved a place.
And just in time for the first course, too.’
‘Come in, Edwin, dear,’ chirped Grace
Bentham from her seat at the table.
Parker naturally stood aside.
‘I want my wife,’ reiterated
Bentham hoarsely, the intonation savoring disagreeably
of ownership.
Parker gasped, was within an ace of
driving his fist into the face of his boorish visitor,
but held himself awkwardly in check. Everybody
rose. Lake lost his head and caught himself on
the verge of saying, ‘Must you go?’ Then
began the farrago of leave-taking. ’So
nice of you ’ ‘I am awfully
sorry’ ‘By Jove! how things did brighten ’
‘Really now, you ’
‘Thank you ever so much ’
‘Nice trip to Dawson ’ etc.,
etc.
In this wise the lamb was helped into
her jacket and led to the slaughter. Then the
door slammed, and they gazed woefully upon the deserted
table.
‘Damn!’ Langham had suffered
disadvantages in his early training, and his oaths
were weak and monotonous. ‘Damn!’
he repeated, vaguely conscious of the incompleteness
and vainly struggling for a more virile term.
It is a clever woman who can fill out the many weak
places in an inefficient man, by her own indomitability,
re-enforce his vacillating nature, infuse her ambitious
soul into his, and spur him on to great achievements.
And it is indeed a very clever and tactful woman who
can do all this, and do it so subtly that the man
receives all the credit and believes in his inmost
heart that everything is due to him and him alone.
This is what Grace Bentham proceeded
to do. Arriving in Dawson with a few pounds of
flour and several letters of introduction, she at once
applied herself to the task of pushing her big baby
to the fore. It was she who melted the stony
heart and wrung credit from the rude barbarian who
presided over the destiny of the P. C. Company; yet
it was Edwin Bentham to whom the concession was ostensibly
granted. It was she who dragged her baby up and
down creeks, over benches and divides, and on a dozen
wild stampedes; yet everybody remarked what an energetic
fellow that Bentham was. It was she who studied
maps, and catechised miners, and hammered geography
and locations into his hollow head, till everybody
marveled at his broad grasp of the country and knowledge
of its conditions. Of course, they said the wife
was a brick, and only a few wise ones appreciated
and pitied the brave little woman.
She did the work; he got the credit
and reward. In the Northwest Territory a married
woman cannot stake or record a creek, bench, or quartz
claim; so Edwin Bentham went down to the Gold Commissioner
and filed on Bench Claim 23, second tier, of French
Hill. And when April came they were washing out
a thousand dollars a day, with many, many such days
in prospect.
At the base of French Hill lay Eldorado
Creek, and on a creek claim stood the cabin of Clyde
Wharton. At present he was not washing out a
diurnal thousand dollars; but his dumps grew, shift
by shift, and there would come a time when those dumps
would pass through his sluice-boxes, depositing in
the riffles, in the course of half a dozen days, several
hundred thousand dollars. He often sat in that
cabin, smoked his pipe, and dreamed beautiful little
dreams, dreams in which neither the dumps
nor the half-ton of dust in the P. C. Company’s
big safe, played a part.
And Grace Bentham, as she washed tin
dishes in her hillside cabin, often glanced down into
Eldorado Creek, and dreamed, not of dumps
nor dust, however. They met frequently, as the
trail to the one claim crossed the other, and there
is much to talk about in the Northland spring; but
never once, by the light of an eye nor the slip of
a tongue, did they speak their hearts.
This is as it was at first. But
one day Edwin Bentham was brutal. All boys are
thus; besides, being a French Hill king now, he began
to think a great deal of himself and to forget all
he owed to his wife. On this day, Wharton heard
of it, and waylaid Grace Bentham, and talked wildly.
This made her very happy, though she would not listen,
and made him promise to not say such things again.
Her hour had not come.
But the sun swept back on its northern
journey, the black of midnight changed to the steely
color of dawn, the snow slipped away, the water dashed
again over the glacial drift, and the wash-up began.
Day and night the yellow clay and scraped bedrock
hurried through the swift sluices, yielding up its
ransom to the strong men from the Southland.
And in that time of tumult came Grace Bentham’s
hour.
To all of us such hours at some time
come, that is, to us who are not too phlegmatic.
Some people are good, not from inherent
love of virtue, but from sheer laziness. But
those of us who know weak moments may understand.
Edwin Bentham was weighing dust over
the bar of the saloon at the Forks altogether
too much of his dust went over that pine board when
his wife came down the hill and slipped into Clyde
Wharton’s cabin. Wharton was not expecting
her, but that did not alter the case. And much
subsequent misery and idle waiting might have been
avoided, had not Father Roubeau seen this and turned
aside from the main creek trail. ‘My child, ’
’Hold on, Father Roubeau! Though I’m
not of your faith, I respect you; but you can’t
come in between this woman and me!’ ‘You
know what you are doing?’ ’Know! Were
you God Almighty, ready to fling me into eternal fire,
I’d bank my will against yours in this matter.’
Wharton had placed Grace on a stool and stood belligerently
before her.
‘You sit down on that chair
and keep quiet,’ he continued, addressing the
Jesuit. ‘I’ll take my innings now.
You can have yours after.’
Father Roubeau bowed courteously and
obeyed. He was an easy-going man and had learned
to bide his time. Wharton pulled a stool alongside
the woman’s, smothering her hand in his.
‘Then you do care for me, and
will take me away?’ Her face seemed to reflect
the peace of this man, against whom she might draw
close for shelter.
‘Dear, don’t you remember
what I said before? Of course I-’ ’But
how can you? the wash-up?’ ’Do
you think that worries? Anyway, I’ll give
the job to Father Roubeau, here.
‘I can trust him to safely bank
the dust with the company.’ ’To think
of it! I’ll never see him again.’
‘A blessing!’ ’And to go O,
Clyde, I can’t! I can’t!’ ’There,
there; of course you can, just let me plan it. You
see, as soon as we get a few traps together, we’ll
start, and-’ ‘Suppose he comes back?’
‘I’ll break every-’ ’No, no!
No fighting, Clyde! Promise me that.’
’All right! I’ll just tell the men
to throw him off the claim. They’ve seen
how he’s treated you, and haven’t much
love for him.’
‘You mustn’t do that.
You mustn’t hurt him.’ ’What
then? Let him come right in here and take you
away before my eyes?’ ‘No-o,’ she
half whispered, stroking his hand softly.
’Then let me run it, and don’t
worry. I’ll see he doesn’t get hurt.
Precious lot he cared whether you got hurt or not!
We won’t go back to Dawson. I’ll
send word down for a couple of the boys to outfit and
pole a boat up the Yukon. We’ll cross the
divide and raft down the Indian River to meet them.
Then ’ ‘And then?’ Her
head was on his shoulder.
Their voices sank to softer cadences,
each word a caress. The Jesuit fidgeted nervously.
‘And then?’ she repeated.
’Why we’ll pole up, and
up, and up, and portage the White Horse Rapids and
the Box Canon.’ ‘Yes?’ ’And
the Sixty-Mile River; then the lakes, Chilcoot, Dyea,
and Salt Water.’ ‘But, dear, I can’t
pole a boat.’ ’You little goose!
I’ll get Sitka Charley; he knows all the good
water and best camps, and he is the best traveler
I ever met, if he is an Indian. All you’ll
have to do, is to sit in the middle of the boat, and
sing songs, and play Cleopatra, and fight no,
we’re in luck; too early for mosquitoes.’
‘And then, O my Antony?’
’And then a steamer, San Francisco, and the
world! Never to come back to this cursed hole
again. Think of it! The world, and ours
to choose from! I’ll sell out. Why,
we’re rich! The Waldworth Syndicate will
give me half a million for what’s left in the
ground, and I’ve got twice as much in the dumps
and with the P. C. Company. We’ll go to
the Fair in Paris in 1900. We’ll go to Jerusalem,
if you say so.
’We’ll buy an Italian
palace, and you can play Cleopatra to your heart’s
content. No, you shall be Lucretia, Acte,
or anybody your little heart sees fit to become.
But you mustn’t, you really mustn’t-’
‘The wife of Cæsar shall be above reproach.’
‘Of course, but ’ ’But
I won’t be your wife, will I, dear?’ ‘I
didn’t mean that.’ ’But you’ll
love me just as much, and never even think oh!
I know you’ll be like other men; you’ll
grow tired, and and-’
‘How can you? I ’
‘Promise me.’ ‘Yes, yes; I do
promise.’ ’You say it so easily,
dear; but how do you know? or I know?
I have so little to give, yet it is so much, and all
I have. O, Clyde! promise me you won’t?’
’There, there! You mustn’t
begin to doubt already. Till death do us part,
you know.’
‘Think! I once said that
to to him, and now?’ ’And now,
little sweetheart, you’re not to bother about
such things any more.
Of course, I never, never will, and ’
And for the first time, lips trembled against lips.
Father Roubeau had been watching the
main trail through the window, but could stand the
strain no longer.
He cleared his throat and turned around.
‘Your turn now, Father!’
Wharton’s face was flushed with the fire of
his first embrace.
There was an exultant ring to his
voice as he abdicated in the other’s favor.
He had no doubt as to the result. Neither had
Grace, for a smile played about her mouth as she faced
the priest.
‘My child,’ he began,
’my heart bleeds for you. It is a pretty
dream, but it cannot be.’
‘And why, Father? I have
said yes.’ ’You knew not what you
did. You did not think of the oath you took,
before your God, to that man who is your husband.
It remains for me to make you realize the sanctity
of such a pledge.’ ‘And if I do realize,
and yet refuse?’
‘Then God’
’Which God? My husband
has a God which I care not to worship. There
must be many such.’ ’Child! unsay
those words! Ah! you do not mean them. I
understand. I, too, have had such moments.’
For an instant he was back in his native France, and
a wistful, sad-eyed face came as a mist between him
and the woman before him.
’Then, Father, has my God forsaken
me? I am not wicked above women. My misery
with him has been great. Why should it be greater?
Why shall I not grasp at happiness? I cannot,
will not, go back to him!’ ’Rather is
your God forsaken. Return. Throw your burden
upon Him, and the darkness shall be lifted. O
my child, ’ ’No; it is useless;
I have made my bed and so shall I lie. I will
go on. And if God punishes me, I shall bear it
somehow. You do not understand. You are not
a woman.’ ’My mother was a woman.’
‘But ’ ‘And
Christ was born of a woman.’ She did not
answer. A silence fell. Wharton pulled his
mustache impatiently and kept an eye on the trail.
Grace leaned her elbow on the table, her face set with
resolve. The smile had died away. Father
Roubeau shifted his ground.
‘You have children?’
‘At one time I wished but
now no. And I am thankful.’
‘And a mother?’ ‘Yes.’
‘She loves you?’ ‘Yes.’
Her replies were whispers.
‘And a brother? no
matter, he is a man. But a sister?’ Her
head drooped a quavering ‘Yes.’ ‘Younger?
Very much?’ ‘Seven years.’ ’And
you have thought well about this matter? About
them? About your mother? And your sister?
She stands on the threshold of her woman’s life,
and this wildness of yours may mean much to her.
Could you go before her, look upon her fresh young
face, hold her hand in yours, or touch your cheek
to hers?’
To his words, her brain formed vivid
images, till she cried out, ‘Don’t! don’t!’
and shrank away as do the wolf-dogs from the lash.
‘But you must face all this;
and better it is to do it now.’ In his
eyes, which she could not see, there was a great compassion,
but his face, tense and quivering, showed no relenting.
She raised her head from the table,
forced back the tears, struggled for control.
’I shall go away. They
will never see me, and come to forget me. I shall
be to them as dead. And and I will
go with Clyde today.’ It seemed
final. Wharton stepped forward, but the priest
waved him back.
‘You have wished for children?’
A silent ‘Yes.’ ‘And prayed
for them?’ ‘Often.’ ‘And
have you thought, if you should have children?’
Father Roubeau’s eyes rested for a moment on
the man by the window.
A quick light shot across her face.
Then the full import dawned upon her. She raised
her hand appealingly, but he went on.
’Can you picture an innocent
babe in your arms? A boy? The world is not
so hard upon a girl. Why, your very breast would
turn to gall! And you could be proud and happy
of your boy, as you looked on other children? ’
‘O, have pity! Hush!’ ‘A scapegoat ’
‘Don’t! don’t! I will go back!’
She was at his feet.
’A child to grow up with no
thought of evil, and one day the world to fling a
tender name in his face. A child to look back
and curse you from whose loins he sprang!’
‘O my God! my God!’ She
groveled on the floor. The priest sighed and
raised her to her feet.
Wharton pressed forward, but she motioned him away.
‘Don’t come near me, Clyde!
I am going back!’ The tears were coursing pitifully
down her face, but she made no effort to wipe them
away.
‘After all this? You cannot!
I will not let you!’ ‘Don’t touch
me!’ She shivered and drew back.
‘I will! You are mine!
Do you hear? You are mine!’ Then he whirled
upon the priest. ’O what a fool I was to
ever let you wag your silly tongue! Thank your
God you are not a common man, for I’d but
the priestly prerogative must be exercised, eh?
Well, you have exercised it. Now get out of my
house, or I’ll forget who and what you are!’
Father Roubeau bowed, took her hand, and started for
the door. But Wharton cut them off.
‘Grace! You said you loved
me?’ ‘I did.’ ‘And you
do now?’ ‘I do.’ ’Say
it again.’
‘I do love you, Clyde; I do.’
‘There, you priest!’ he cried. ’You
have heard it, and with those words on her lips you
would send her back to live a lie and a hell with
that man?’
But Father Roubeau whisked the woman
into the inner room and closed the door. ‘No
words!’ he whispered to Wharton, as he struck
a casual posture on a stool. ‘Remember,
for her sake,’ he added.
The room echoed to a rough knock at
the door; the latch raised and Edwin Bentham stepped
in.
‘Seen anything of my wife?’
he asked as soon as salutations had been exchanged.
Two heads nodded negatively.
‘I saw her tracks down from
the cabin,’ he continued tentatively, ’and
they broke off, just opposite here, on the main trail.’
His listeners looked bored.
‘And I I thought ’
‘She was here!’ thundered Wharton.
The priest silenced him with a look.
’Did you see her tracks leading up to this cabin,
my son?’ Wily Father Roubeau he had
taken good care to obliterate them as he came up the
same path an hour before.
‘I didn’t stop to look,
I ’ His eyes rested suspiciously on
the door to the other room, then interrogated the
priest. The latter shook his head; but the doubt
seemed to linger.
Father Roubeau breathed a swift, silent
prayer, and rose to his feet. ‘If you doubt
me, why ’ He made as though to open
the door.
A priest could not lie. Edwin
Bentham had heard this often, and believed it.
‘Of course not, Father,’
he interposed hurriedly. ’I was only wondering
where my wife had gone, and thought maybe I
guess she’s up at Mrs. Stanton’s on French
Gulch. Nice weather, isn’t it? Heard
the news? Flour’s gone down to forty dollars
a hundred, and they say the che-cha-quas are
flocking down the river in droves.
‘But I must be going; so good-by.’
The door slammed, and from the window they watched
him take his guest up French Gulch. A few weeks
later, just after the June high-water, two men shot
a canoe into mid-stream and made fast to a derelict
pine. This tightened the painter and jerked the
frail craft along as would a tow-boat. Father
Roubeau had been directed to leave the Upper Country
and return to his swarthy children at Minook.
The white men had come among them, and they were devoting
too little time to fishing, and too much to a certain
deity whose transient habitat was in countless black
bottles.
Malemute Kid also had business in
the Lower Country, so they journeyed together.
But one, in all the Northland, knew
the man Paul Roubeau, and that man was Malemute Kid.
Before him alone did the priest cast off the sacerdotal
garb and stand naked. And why not? These
two men knew each other. Had they not shared
the last morsel of fish, the last pinch of tobacco,
the last and inmost thought, on the barren stretches
of Bering Sea, in the heartbreaking mazes of the Great
Delta, on the terrible winter journey from Point Barrow
to the Porcupine? Father Roubeau puffed heavily
at his trail-worn pipe, and gazed on the reddisked
sun, poised somberly on the edge of the northern horizon.
Malemute Kid wound up his watch. It was midnight.
‘Cheer up, old man!’ The Kid was evidently
gathering up a broken thread.
’God surely will forgive such
a lie. Let me give you the word of a man who
strikes a true note: If She have spoken a word,
remember thy lips are sealed, And the brand of the
Dog is upon him by whom is the secret revealed.
If there be trouble to Herward, and a lie of the blackest
can clear,
Lie, while thy lips can move or a man is alive to
hear.’
Father Roubeau removed his pipe and
reflected. ’The man speaks true, but my
soul is not vexed with that. The lie and the penance
stand with God; but but ’
‘What then? Your hands
are clean.’ ’Not so. Kid, I have
thought much, and yet the thing remains. I knew,
and made her go back.’ The clear note of
a robin rang out from the wooden bank, a partridge
drummed the call in the distance, a moose lunged noisily
in the eddy; but the twain smoked on in silence.